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Continuing Our Guide for New Plant Safety Managers
On Monday, we took a closer look at the first few steps of an on-site OSHA visit, including the opening conference and records review. (Refresh your memory on that post here.) As a new plant safety manager, being prepared in a situation like this is key, and we want to make sure you have the tools and information you need.
Now let’s take a look at the remaining two portions of the visit—the walk-around inspection and the closing conference.
Walk-...

Continuing Our Guide for New Plant Safety Managers
You have been the new plant safety manager for a little over two months. During this timeframe you have had the opportunity to review the limited number of safety procedures left in your office by your predecessor and you are beginning to move forward with your safety responsibilities by following the requirements in the procedures.
As part of the Plant Manager’s commitment to safety (our second blog of this series) you have had regularly scheduled...

In 2010 RSE SpA (Energy System Research Inc.) within a Program Agreement with the Italian Ministry of Economic Development started ameasurement campaign on a Libellula wind plantinstalled in Tuscany. The campaign lasted 1 ½ years and during this time RSE measured the turbine’s power curve following the requirements of the relevant IEC Standard (EN 61400-12-1 – EN 61400-2). The results of this study have proven that themeasured power curvecorresponds to the theoretical curve given by Aria.
The...

There are two potentially dangerous types of gas in a commercial kitchen: 1) the flammable ones used for cooking (e.g. methane/natural gas; propane/liquefied petroleum gas); and 2) the noxious, gaseous products of combustion such as carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide and hydrocarbons. It would be good to know how to avoid them. But a search for advice on kitchen ventilation threatens to drown the investigator in a sea of acronyms. The roll call includes the BSI, CEDA, CESA, HSE, HVCA, IGEM and the unabbreviated but...

CASE STUDY #0116 GATE 1204 PILOT, SEBRING, FL
SITE OVERVIEW
Active gas station in Sebring, FL FDEP Site Number: 8629375
CONTAMINATION
Gasoline contaminants in ground water
Two site features that have long been a detriment to chemical oxidant treatments at sites have recently been overcome by EN Rx. These are free product treatment and shallow water tables. Generally, chemical oxidants are so violently reactive to free product that it becomes dangerous to both workers and site periphera...

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